Here is some prose poetry--from the Michael C. Keith universe. Keith is a professor of Communications at Boston College. He is widely published in a number of genres.
Wound
Dresser
Whitman brings them
candy, books, and solace as their injuries from the uncivil war
fester and resist healing. He loves their youth and listens to their
battlefield accounts as intently as any minister or parent would. The
great army of the sick relentlessly fills hospitals with its maimed
and distressed as the bard of democracy holds vigils for the
countless dying. Later at his makeshift desk in the embalming station
he sets to paper the tears that have accumulated in his quill.
Photo Noir
A body slumps in the Chevy
convertible sedan. Its bloodied head hangs from the window. Cops are standing
around waiting for the coroner to arrive. Already on the scene is Weegee, the
ubiquitous press photographer. This is the second killing he’s shot since
midnight. He hopes he’ll get in a couple more black-and-whites of low-life
before the night is over. It’s been a
slow one, he thinks.
These are both excellent prose poems with a strong sense of the immediate. Whitman is one of my great icon heroes.
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